POPULAR
METHODOLOGY
APPROACHES, METHODS, PROCEDURES, AND
TECHNIQUES
   Approach : this refers to “theories about the nature of language
    and language learning which are the source of practices and
    principles in language teaching”. It offers a model of language
    competence. An approach describes how language is used. An
    approach describes how people acquire their knowledge of the
    language and make statements about the conditions which will
    promote successful language learning.

   Method : a method is the practical realization of an approach.
    Methods include various procedures and techniques as part of
    their standard fare.

   Procedure : a procedure is an ordered sequence of techniques.
    A procedure is a sequence which can be described in terms such
    as First you do this, then you do that… Smaller than a method
    and bigger than technique.
   Technique : a common technique when using video
    material is called “silent viewing”. This is where the
    teacher plays the video with no sound. Silent
    viewing is a single activity rather than a sequence,
    and as such is a technique rather than a whole
    procedure.
THE GRAMMAR – TRANSLATION METHOD (GTM)
   This is a method that has been used by language
    teachers for many years.

    Place of the students’ first language in the
    classroom.

   Earlier in this century, it was used for the purpose of
    helping students read and appreciate foreign
    language literature.
THE GRAMMAR – TRANSLATION METHOD
 Classes are taught in the students mother tongue,with
  little active use of the target language;
 Vocabulary is taught in the form of isolated word lists;

 Elaborate explanations of grammar are always

   provided;
 Reading of difficult text is begun early in the course of
  study;
 Little attention is paid to the content of text, which are
  treated as exercises in grammatical analysis.
 There is little, if any, consideration of the spoken
  language.
 Accuracy is considered to be a necessity.
THE DIRECT METHOD
The   Direct Method, also called the Natural Approach,
developed towards the end of the 19th century.
It represents critical reaction to the teaching methods of the
ancient G T M which produced knowledge about language
rather than knowledge of language.
The general goal of the Direct Method is to provide learners
with a practically useful knowledge of language.
Teacher and students speaking together, relating the
grammatical forms they were studying to objects and pictures,
etc. in order to establish their meaning.
The sentence was still the main object of interest , and
accuracy was all important.
They should learn to speak and understand the target
language in everyday situations.
Only the target language should be used in the classroom.
AUDIOLINGUALISM
     Audio-lingual methodology owes its existence to the
      Behaviourist models of learning using the Stimulus-
      Response-Reinforcement model, it attempted, through
      a continuous process of such positive reinforcement, to
      engender good habits in language learners.

     Audio-lingualism relied heavily on drills like substitution
      to form these habits.

     Habit-forming drills have remained popular among
      teachers and students, and teachers who feel confident
      with the linguistic restriction of such procedures
PRESENTATION, PRACTICE, AND PRODUCTION
   A variation on Audiolingualism in British-based
    teaching and elsewhere is the procedure most often
    referred to as PPP, which stands for Presentation,
    Practice and Production.

   In this procedure the teacher introduces a situation
    which contextualises the language to be taught.
    The students now practice the language using
    accurate reproduction techniques such as choral
    repetition, individual repetition, and cue-response
    drills
Production




Practice            Presentation
PPP AND ALTERNATIVES TO PPP
    The PPP procedure came under a sustained attack in the
     1990s.

    Michael Lewis suggested that PPP was inadequate
     because it reflected neither the nature of language nor
     the nature of learning.

    Jim Scrivener advanced what is perhaps the most
     worrying aspect of PPP, the fact that it only describes one
     kind of lesson; it is inadequate as a general proposal
     concerning approaches to language in the classroom.

    In response to these criticisms many people have offered
     variations on PPP and alternative to it: ESA.
ESA
    In the ESA model three components will usually be
     present in any teaching sequence, whether of five, fifty
     or a hundred minutes

    E stands for Engage - students have to be engaged
     emotionally

    S stands for Study

    A stands for Activate - any stage at which students are
     encouraged to use all and/or any of the language they
     know
Engage


 Study


Activate

           Strait arrows lesson
           procedure
Engage

Study




Activate



           Boomerang
           lesson procedure
Engage




 Study




Activate




           An example of a Patchwork
           lesson procedure
FOUR METHODS

   These methods developed in the 1970s and
    1980s as humanistic approaches to remove
    psychological barrieis to learning.

    1. Community Language Learning
       - students sitting in a circle
       - a counsellor or a knower
       - making the utterance
THE COMMUNICATIVE APPROACH

   The communicative approach or Communicative
    Language Teaching (CLT) is the name which was
    given to a set of beliefs which included not only a
    re-examination of what aspects of language to
    teach but also a shift in emphasis on how to teach!
Non-communicative activities       Communicative activities




   •No communicative desire                     •A desire to communicate
   •No communicative purpose                    •A communicative purpose
   •Form, not content                           •Content, not form
   •One language item only                      •Variety of language items
   •Teacher intervention                        •No teacher intervention
   •Materials control                           •No materials control


                        The communication continuum
TASK-BASED LEARNING (TBL)
     Popularised by Prabhu, who speculated that students
      were likely to learn language if they were thinking about
      a non-linguistic problem.

     Three basic stages of TBL according to Jane Willis:
      1. Pre task (introduction to topic and task)
      2. Task cycle (task, planning and report)
      3. Language focus (analysis, practice).
Pre - task
Introduction to topic and
           task

       Task cycle
          Task
        Planning
         Report

    Language focus
       Analysis
       Practice
   Pre-task: The teacher explains the woman’s situation and asks
    students, in pairs, to brainstorm three consecutive steps they might
    take to help cure the woman of her phobia.
   Task: Pairs list possible ways to help the woman get over the
    phobia.
   Planning: pairs rehearse how to explain the steps they recommend,
    and justify the order they are in.
   Report and reading: The pairs tell the class their proposals and
    justify them. The class listen and count how many ideas they came
    up with.
   The teacher lets the class decide and vote on which three steps
    might be similar to those in a newspaper report about the phobic
    woman’s dilemma. She writes these on the board.
   The teacher gives out the text. She asks students to read to see
    whether their three steps were in the report. Finally, she asks which
    pair had the most steps that were similar.
   Language focus: the teacher helps students with any mistakes she
    heard during the task. She then directs students back to the article
    and they analyse it for topic vocabulary, time expressions, syntax
    elements, etc.
THE LEXICAL APPROACH
   The lexical approach, discussed by Dave Willis and
    popularised by the writer Michael Lewis, is based
    on the assertion that language doesn't consist of
    traditional grammar and vocabulary, but also of
    phrases, collocations, and idioms.

   A lexical approach would steer us towards the
    teaching of phrases which show words in
    combination. Thus, instead of teaching will for the
    future, we might instead have students focus on its
    use in a series of archetypical utterances such as
    I'll give you a ring.
METHODS AND CULTURE
   A mismatch between “teacher intention and learner interpretation”.
    Our attitudes to the language, and to the way it is taught, reflect
    cultural biases and beliefs about how we should communicate and
    how we should educate each other.

   Many of the approaches and teaching methods are based on a very
    Western idea of what constitues “good learning“. For example,
    American teachers working in other countries sometimes complain
    that their students have nothing to say when in fact it is not an issue
    of the student's intelligence, knowledge, or creativity which makes
    them reluctant to communicate, but their educational culture.
    Teachers need to understand student wants and expectations just
    as much as they are determined to push their own methodological
    beliefs. DISCUSSION!
MAKING CHOICES
    Exposure to language: students need constant exposure to language
     since this is a key component of language acquisition

    Input: students need comprehensible input but this is not enough in
     itself, they need some opportunity for noticing or consciousness–
     raising to help students remember language facts

    CLT: communicative activities and task-based teaching offer real
     learning benefits

    The affective variable: anxiety needs to be lowered for learning to take
     place.

    output: students need chances to activate their language knowledge
     through meaning focused tasks.

    Cognitive effort: where culturally appropriate, students should be
     encouraged to discover things for themselves.
   Grammar and lexis: showing how words combine together and
    behave both semantically and grammatically is an important part of
    any language learning programme.

   Methodology and culture: teaching methodology is rooted in
    popular culture. Therefore, compromise may be necessary.

   How, Why and Where: The actual way we do things depends not
    on the choice of a method , but rather on why and where we are
    teaching.
   Pragmatic eclecticism does not just mean that “anything goes“. On
    the contrary, students have a right to expect that they are being
    asked to do things for a reason, and that their teacher has some
    aim in mind which he or she can, if asked, articulate clearly.
    Teaching plans should always be designed to meet an aim or aims.

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Popular methodology 21 oct 2011

  • 2. APPROACHES, METHODS, PROCEDURES, AND TECHNIQUES  Approach : this refers to “theories about the nature of language and language learning which are the source of practices and principles in language teaching”. It offers a model of language competence. An approach describes how language is used. An approach describes how people acquire their knowledge of the language and make statements about the conditions which will promote successful language learning.  Method : a method is the practical realization of an approach. Methods include various procedures and techniques as part of their standard fare.  Procedure : a procedure is an ordered sequence of techniques. A procedure is a sequence which can be described in terms such as First you do this, then you do that… Smaller than a method and bigger than technique.
  • 3. Technique : a common technique when using video material is called “silent viewing”. This is where the teacher plays the video with no sound. Silent viewing is a single activity rather than a sequence, and as such is a technique rather than a whole procedure.
  • 4. THE GRAMMAR – TRANSLATION METHOD (GTM)  This is a method that has been used by language teachers for many years.  Place of the students’ first language in the classroom.  Earlier in this century, it was used for the purpose of helping students read and appreciate foreign language literature.
  • 5. THE GRAMMAR – TRANSLATION METHOD  Classes are taught in the students mother tongue,with little active use of the target language;  Vocabulary is taught in the form of isolated word lists;  Elaborate explanations of grammar are always provided;  Reading of difficult text is begun early in the course of study;  Little attention is paid to the content of text, which are treated as exercises in grammatical analysis.  There is little, if any, consideration of the spoken language.  Accuracy is considered to be a necessity.
  • 6. THE DIRECT METHOD The Direct Method, also called the Natural Approach, developed towards the end of the 19th century. It represents critical reaction to the teaching methods of the ancient G T M which produced knowledge about language rather than knowledge of language. The general goal of the Direct Method is to provide learners with a practically useful knowledge of language. Teacher and students speaking together, relating the grammatical forms they were studying to objects and pictures, etc. in order to establish their meaning. The sentence was still the main object of interest , and accuracy was all important. They should learn to speak and understand the target language in everyday situations. Only the target language should be used in the classroom.
  • 7. AUDIOLINGUALISM  Audio-lingual methodology owes its existence to the Behaviourist models of learning using the Stimulus- Response-Reinforcement model, it attempted, through a continuous process of such positive reinforcement, to engender good habits in language learners.  Audio-lingualism relied heavily on drills like substitution to form these habits.  Habit-forming drills have remained popular among teachers and students, and teachers who feel confident with the linguistic restriction of such procedures
  • 8. PRESENTATION, PRACTICE, AND PRODUCTION  A variation on Audiolingualism in British-based teaching and elsewhere is the procedure most often referred to as PPP, which stands for Presentation, Practice and Production.  In this procedure the teacher introduces a situation which contextualises the language to be taught. The students now practice the language using accurate reproduction techniques such as choral repetition, individual repetition, and cue-response drills
  • 9. Production Practice Presentation
  • 10. PPP AND ALTERNATIVES TO PPP  The PPP procedure came under a sustained attack in the 1990s.  Michael Lewis suggested that PPP was inadequate because it reflected neither the nature of language nor the nature of learning.  Jim Scrivener advanced what is perhaps the most worrying aspect of PPP, the fact that it only describes one kind of lesson; it is inadequate as a general proposal concerning approaches to language in the classroom.  In response to these criticisms many people have offered variations on PPP and alternative to it: ESA.
  • 11. ESA  In the ESA model three components will usually be present in any teaching sequence, whether of five, fifty or a hundred minutes  E stands for Engage - students have to be engaged emotionally  S stands for Study  A stands for Activate - any stage at which students are encouraged to use all and/or any of the language they know
  • 12. Engage Study Activate Strait arrows lesson procedure
  • 13. Engage Study Activate Boomerang lesson procedure
  • 14. Engage Study Activate An example of a Patchwork lesson procedure
  • 15. FOUR METHODS  These methods developed in the 1970s and 1980s as humanistic approaches to remove psychological barrieis to learning. 1. Community Language Learning - students sitting in a circle - a counsellor or a knower - making the utterance
  • 16. THE COMMUNICATIVE APPROACH  The communicative approach or Communicative Language Teaching (CLT) is the name which was given to a set of beliefs which included not only a re-examination of what aspects of language to teach but also a shift in emphasis on how to teach!
  • 17. Non-communicative activities Communicative activities •No communicative desire •A desire to communicate •No communicative purpose •A communicative purpose •Form, not content •Content, not form •One language item only •Variety of language items •Teacher intervention •No teacher intervention •Materials control •No materials control The communication continuum
  • 18. TASK-BASED LEARNING (TBL)  Popularised by Prabhu, who speculated that students were likely to learn language if they were thinking about a non-linguistic problem.  Three basic stages of TBL according to Jane Willis: 1. Pre task (introduction to topic and task) 2. Task cycle (task, planning and report) 3. Language focus (analysis, practice).
  • 19. Pre - task Introduction to topic and task Task cycle Task Planning Report Language focus Analysis Practice
  • 20. Pre-task: The teacher explains the woman’s situation and asks students, in pairs, to brainstorm three consecutive steps they might take to help cure the woman of her phobia.  Task: Pairs list possible ways to help the woman get over the phobia.  Planning: pairs rehearse how to explain the steps they recommend, and justify the order they are in.  Report and reading: The pairs tell the class their proposals and justify them. The class listen and count how many ideas they came up with.  The teacher lets the class decide and vote on which three steps might be similar to those in a newspaper report about the phobic woman’s dilemma. She writes these on the board.  The teacher gives out the text. She asks students to read to see whether their three steps were in the report. Finally, she asks which pair had the most steps that were similar.  Language focus: the teacher helps students with any mistakes she heard during the task. She then directs students back to the article and they analyse it for topic vocabulary, time expressions, syntax elements, etc.
  • 21. THE LEXICAL APPROACH  The lexical approach, discussed by Dave Willis and popularised by the writer Michael Lewis, is based on the assertion that language doesn't consist of traditional grammar and vocabulary, but also of phrases, collocations, and idioms.  A lexical approach would steer us towards the teaching of phrases which show words in combination. Thus, instead of teaching will for the future, we might instead have students focus on its use in a series of archetypical utterances such as I'll give you a ring.
  • 22. METHODS AND CULTURE  A mismatch between “teacher intention and learner interpretation”. Our attitudes to the language, and to the way it is taught, reflect cultural biases and beliefs about how we should communicate and how we should educate each other.  Many of the approaches and teaching methods are based on a very Western idea of what constitues “good learning“. For example, American teachers working in other countries sometimes complain that their students have nothing to say when in fact it is not an issue of the student's intelligence, knowledge, or creativity which makes them reluctant to communicate, but their educational culture. Teachers need to understand student wants and expectations just as much as they are determined to push their own methodological beliefs. DISCUSSION!
  • 23. MAKING CHOICES  Exposure to language: students need constant exposure to language since this is a key component of language acquisition  Input: students need comprehensible input but this is not enough in itself, they need some opportunity for noticing or consciousness– raising to help students remember language facts  CLT: communicative activities and task-based teaching offer real learning benefits  The affective variable: anxiety needs to be lowered for learning to take place.  output: students need chances to activate their language knowledge through meaning focused tasks.  Cognitive effort: where culturally appropriate, students should be encouraged to discover things for themselves.
  • 24. Grammar and lexis: showing how words combine together and behave both semantically and grammatically is an important part of any language learning programme.  Methodology and culture: teaching methodology is rooted in popular culture. Therefore, compromise may be necessary.  How, Why and Where: The actual way we do things depends not on the choice of a method , but rather on why and where we are teaching.  Pragmatic eclecticism does not just mean that “anything goes“. On the contrary, students have a right to expect that they are being asked to do things for a reason, and that their teacher has some aim in mind which he or she can, if asked, articulate clearly. Teaching plans should always be designed to meet an aim or aims.